knowt logo

Civics Unit 3

Structure of Congress

A Bicameral Legislature

  • Upper House - Senate (equal representation - 2 representatives per state)

    • Used to be chosen by state legislatures before the 17th Amendment

  • Lower House - House of Representatives (population-based, proportional)

    • more accountable!

Congress - “first branch of government” - James Madison

Terms of Congress

  • Each Congress lasts for a meeting period or term of 2 years.

  • Each term starts January 3 of odd-numbered years.

  • Each term is divided into 2 “sessions” which lasts from January to November

  • Special Session - Congress meets in times of crisis

  • Joint Session - when House and Senate meet (presidential addresses, electoral counts

House of Representatives

  • 435 voting members

    • each state has at least one representative, no matter how small they are

  • House also has 6 non-voting members from D.C., Puerto Rico, and our 4 U.S. territories

  • After each 10-year census, Congress adjusts the number of Reps. for each state (if needed); new seats take effect after 3 years

    • NC recently added a seat

  • Elections every even year, Reps take over January 3 of every odd year.

  • Reps serve 2-year terms

  • Each state is divided into 1 or more “Congressional Districts”

    • Districts must include roughly the same number of constituents

The Senate

  • 100 members

    • 2 from each state

    • Senators represent the entire state rather than just a district

  • Senators serve 6-year terms

    • Staggered elections every 2 years (1/3, 1/3, 1/3)

Leaders in Congress

  • In both the House and Senate, the political party to which more than half the members belong is known as the majority party.

  • The other party is called the minority party.

  • At the beginning of each term (every 2 years) party members in each house choose its leaders.

  • Overall Leaders:

    • House - “Speaker of the House” - next in line for presidency after VP

      • From majority party; leader of House.

      • Counts votes, appoints members to committees, sends bills to committees, gives permission to speak, etc.

    • Senate - VP Presides - breaks vote in a tie; OR President Pro Tempore (senior)

  • Other Leaders (both houses):

    • Majority/minority leaders

      • More power in Senate

      • Majority leader in Senate is similar in power to the Speaker

      • Majority/Minority whips

Qualifications and Benefits

  • Senator - must be 30, live in the state you represent, and have been a U.S. citizen for at least 9 years

  • House - must be 25, live in the state you plan to represent, and have been a U.S. citizen for at least 7 years

    • most have attended college and are lawyers, but this is NOT a requirement

Benefits

  • Salary - $174,000 (‘09)

  • Can send job-related mail without paying postage - Franking privilege

  • Speech and Debate Clause - Constitution grants Senators/Reps immunity to say what they believe is right within Congress (certain situations)

Legislative Powers

  • Expressed Powers - Article 1, Section 8 - are clearly listed

  • Implied Powers - Article 1, Section 8, Clause 18 - “Necessary and Proper” Clause

    • Elastic Clause - has allowed Congress to “stretch” its power

  • Expressed Powers:

    • Lay and collect taxes

    • Borrow money/pay debts

    • Establish naturalization laws

    • Raise an army/navy

    • Regulate commerce

    • Establish a post office

    • Coin money

    • Create lower courts

    • Declare war

    • Promote progress of arts and science

    • Protect patents and copyrights

    • “Necessary and Proper” Clause

  • Implied Powers (“Elastic Clause”):

    • Create the IRS

    • Punish tax evasion

    • Establish the Federal Reserve

    • Regulate immigration

    • Set a minimum wage

    • Draft for military

    • Oversee workplace safety

    • Outlaw workplace discrimination

    • Protect against mail fraud

House-Specific Powers:

  • Initiate revenue bills

  • Initiate impeachment procedures federal officials

  • Elect the president in the case of an electoral tie

Senate-Specific Powers:

  • Authority to approve/reject presidential nominations to executive and judicial offices

    • SCOTUS - 20% rejected

  • Treaties must be ratified by 2/3s vote of Senate

    • Versailles, SALT II

  • Tries impeachment trial

    • 2/3s vote to convict

  • Most important job of the legislative branch: TO MAKE LAWS

Committee Work

  • 1000s of bills are proposed each session, so to make it possible to handle this many, Congress has developed a system of committees

3 Types of Standing Committees

  1. Standing Committees - permanent

    1. House has 20, Senate has 16

  2. Select/Special Committees - temporary to deal with special issues

  3. Joint Committees - members of both houses meet to consider specific issues

    1. 4 permanent - printing, library, taxation, economic

  • Most Congressmen/women try to get assigned to important committees that affect their constituents

  • Senators/Representatives who have been in Congress longest usually get the referred committee spots (seniority)

  • The longest serving committee member from the majority party traditionally becomes “chairperson.”

  • The chairperson decides when/if the committee will meet, what bills will be studied, and who will serve on which subcommittees

Most Important Committees

House:

  • Ways and Means Committee - considers legislation on taxation

    • taxation has to originate in the House

  • Budget Committee - decides the budget of the government

  • Appropriations Committee - decides which programs get how much money

  • Rules Committee - policemen of ALL bills. Decides the procedures on which bills get voted, the amending process, the debate process, the rules for voting, etc.

Senate:

  • Appropriations Committee - decides how money is spent

  • Foreign Relations Committee - all treaties go through them

    • Foreign relations items go to Senate

  • Senate Armed Services Committee - authority over military, Department of Defense, military research, etc.

Congress - Basic Work

  • Lawmaking - most pieces of legislation are in the form of bills.

    • Bills = drafts of law

  • Casework - the work done by a lawmaker to help constituents with a problem.

    • Some receive as many as 10,000 requests for info/services a year

  • Helping the District or State - members of Congress also try to bring federal government projects to their district/state

    • Public Works - every year Congress appropriates billions for a variety of projects (post office, military bases, dams, etc.) These bring jobs/money into a state/district

    • Grants and Contracts - government projects and grants that primarily benefit the home district are known as pork-barrel projects

2 Categories (all passed through Congress the same way)

  • Bills - proposed legislation under consideration by the legislature

    • Private - concern individual people or organizations (and their crimes against the government, etc.) ie.

    • Public - veterans benefits, taxation problems, etc. Concern the entire nation and involve general matters (Ex: taxation)

  • Joint Resolutions - no difference between a bill and a joint resolution.

    • Usually used to fix emergency problems.

    • Often used for ONE issue.

    • Ex: Tonkin Gulf Resolution

Role of Legislators

  1. Delegate - vote based on how they think the people in their home state or district would want them to vote.

  2. Trustee - believes that each question they face must be decided on its own merits. They vote based on their own judgment and ideology.

  3. Politico - is a combination of a delegate and a trustee.

From Bill to Law

Steps:

  • 1. Introduction - Every bill starts as an idea, which can come form private citizens, the White House, or special-interest groups.

    • A senator or rep. MUST introduce a bill before Congress will consider it.

    • Each bill is given a title and a number when it’s submitted

    • Congress = Proposal power

  • 2. Committee Action - after a bill is introduced it’s sent to the standing committee that is related to the subject of the bill. The committee can…

    • Pass the bill

    • Mark up/make changes

    • Ignore the bill and let it die (pigeonholing)

    • Kill the bill by majority vote

  • 3. Debating a Bill - bills approved in committee are ready for consideration by the full House or Senate

    • Rules of Debate - House - the Rules Committee sets the terms for debate like putting time limits on discussions, etc.

    • Rules of Debate - Senate - has fewer rules. Senators don’t have time limits.

      • Why filibuster? Senate needs unanimous consent before voting. Can end a filihjbuster with a 3/5 vote for cloture.

  • 4. Voting on a Bill - 3 ways; bills require majority vote (51%) to pass

    • House - voice vote (not tallied), standing vote, recorded vote (vote electronically)

    • Senate - voice vote (not tallied), standing vote, roll call vote (tallied)

    • Bills must pass both House and Senate before going to President.

Action by the President

  • After a bill is approved by both the House and Senate, it goes to the president. The president has 3 options:

    • Sign the bill and declare it a new law

    • Veto (reject bill). Congress can override it with a 2/3 vote.

      • Choose no action - if Congress is in session, after 10 days of no answer, bill becomes law

      • Pocket veto - if Congress adjourns within 10 days after giving the president the bill, the president can choose not to sign it and the bill will NOT become law.

Congress can override a presidential veto with a 2/3 majority vote.

Congress and the Budget

Preparing the Budget

  • Each year, the president and Congress work together to create a budget - a blueprint of how the government will raise and spend money.

  • Federal government fiscal year - October 1 to September 30

Budget Process

  • In February, the president proposes a budget to Congress. Congress then passes a budget resolution which totals revenues and spendings and sets targets for spending in various categories.

  • 2 Types of Spending:

    • Mandatory spending - does not need approval; it is required by law. Ex: social security

    • Discretionary spending - needs approval. Ex: highway construction

  • Next, Congress must pass appropriations bills - which approve spending for a particular activity. Must be approved by House, Senate, and the president.

Revenues and Expenditures

2 Parts to Budget:

  • 1. Revenues - half of federal revenue comes from income taxes (individual/corporate).

    • Second largest source of income is payroll taxes like social security and medicare.

    • Other sources include excise taxes (on goods), estate taxes (upon death), and entry feeds to nationally run places.

      • 3 Types of Taxes:

        • Progressive Tax - tax rates increase as income increases; our U.S. income taxes are set up this way.

        • Regressive Tax - where the tax rate falls for those who are in higher income brackets (as a percentage of their overall income). Ex: sales tax, social security tax, because poorer people spend more “in proportion” to their income.

        • Proportional Tax - tax takes the same percentage of income from everyone, regardless of how much they earn. Ex: NC income tax - 4.75%

  • 2. Expenditures - largest government expenditure is social security.

    • Also national defense

    • The government spends $300 billion on interest payments on our national debt

Why is the president so involved in the budget?

  • Because of the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921. It makes the president responsible for directing the preparation of the budget and making the major decisions about national budget priorities.

AP

Civics Unit 3

Structure of Congress

A Bicameral Legislature

  • Upper House - Senate (equal representation - 2 representatives per state)

    • Used to be chosen by state legislatures before the 17th Amendment

  • Lower House - House of Representatives (population-based, proportional)

    • more accountable!

Congress - “first branch of government” - James Madison

Terms of Congress

  • Each Congress lasts for a meeting period or term of 2 years.

  • Each term starts January 3 of odd-numbered years.

  • Each term is divided into 2 “sessions” which lasts from January to November

  • Special Session - Congress meets in times of crisis

  • Joint Session - when House and Senate meet (presidential addresses, electoral counts

House of Representatives

  • 435 voting members

    • each state has at least one representative, no matter how small they are

  • House also has 6 non-voting members from D.C., Puerto Rico, and our 4 U.S. territories

  • After each 10-year census, Congress adjusts the number of Reps. for each state (if needed); new seats take effect after 3 years

    • NC recently added a seat

  • Elections every even year, Reps take over January 3 of every odd year.

  • Reps serve 2-year terms

  • Each state is divided into 1 or more “Congressional Districts”

    • Districts must include roughly the same number of constituents

The Senate

  • 100 members

    • 2 from each state

    • Senators represent the entire state rather than just a district

  • Senators serve 6-year terms

    • Staggered elections every 2 years (1/3, 1/3, 1/3)

Leaders in Congress

  • In both the House and Senate, the political party to which more than half the members belong is known as the majority party.

  • The other party is called the minority party.

  • At the beginning of each term (every 2 years) party members in each house choose its leaders.

  • Overall Leaders:

    • House - “Speaker of the House” - next in line for presidency after VP

      • From majority party; leader of House.

      • Counts votes, appoints members to committees, sends bills to committees, gives permission to speak, etc.

    • Senate - VP Presides - breaks vote in a tie; OR President Pro Tempore (senior)

  • Other Leaders (both houses):

    • Majority/minority leaders

      • More power in Senate

      • Majority leader in Senate is similar in power to the Speaker

      • Majority/Minority whips

Qualifications and Benefits

  • Senator - must be 30, live in the state you represent, and have been a U.S. citizen for at least 9 years

  • House - must be 25, live in the state you plan to represent, and have been a U.S. citizen for at least 7 years

    • most have attended college and are lawyers, but this is NOT a requirement

Benefits

  • Salary - $174,000 (‘09)

  • Can send job-related mail without paying postage - Franking privilege

  • Speech and Debate Clause - Constitution grants Senators/Reps immunity to say what they believe is right within Congress (certain situations)

Legislative Powers

  • Expressed Powers - Article 1, Section 8 - are clearly listed

  • Implied Powers - Article 1, Section 8, Clause 18 - “Necessary and Proper” Clause

    • Elastic Clause - has allowed Congress to “stretch” its power

  • Expressed Powers:

    • Lay and collect taxes

    • Borrow money/pay debts

    • Establish naturalization laws

    • Raise an army/navy

    • Regulate commerce

    • Establish a post office

    • Coin money

    • Create lower courts

    • Declare war

    • Promote progress of arts and science

    • Protect patents and copyrights

    • “Necessary and Proper” Clause

  • Implied Powers (“Elastic Clause”):

    • Create the IRS

    • Punish tax evasion

    • Establish the Federal Reserve

    • Regulate immigration

    • Set a minimum wage

    • Draft for military

    • Oversee workplace safety

    • Outlaw workplace discrimination

    • Protect against mail fraud

House-Specific Powers:

  • Initiate revenue bills

  • Initiate impeachment procedures federal officials

  • Elect the president in the case of an electoral tie

Senate-Specific Powers:

  • Authority to approve/reject presidential nominations to executive and judicial offices

    • SCOTUS - 20% rejected

  • Treaties must be ratified by 2/3s vote of Senate

    • Versailles, SALT II

  • Tries impeachment trial

    • 2/3s vote to convict

  • Most important job of the legislative branch: TO MAKE LAWS

Committee Work

  • 1000s of bills are proposed each session, so to make it possible to handle this many, Congress has developed a system of committees

3 Types of Standing Committees

  1. Standing Committees - permanent

    1. House has 20, Senate has 16

  2. Select/Special Committees - temporary to deal with special issues

  3. Joint Committees - members of both houses meet to consider specific issues

    1. 4 permanent - printing, library, taxation, economic

  • Most Congressmen/women try to get assigned to important committees that affect their constituents

  • Senators/Representatives who have been in Congress longest usually get the referred committee spots (seniority)

  • The longest serving committee member from the majority party traditionally becomes “chairperson.”

  • The chairperson decides when/if the committee will meet, what bills will be studied, and who will serve on which subcommittees

Most Important Committees

House:

  • Ways and Means Committee - considers legislation on taxation

    • taxation has to originate in the House

  • Budget Committee - decides the budget of the government

  • Appropriations Committee - decides which programs get how much money

  • Rules Committee - policemen of ALL bills. Decides the procedures on which bills get voted, the amending process, the debate process, the rules for voting, etc.

Senate:

  • Appropriations Committee - decides how money is spent

  • Foreign Relations Committee - all treaties go through them

    • Foreign relations items go to Senate

  • Senate Armed Services Committee - authority over military, Department of Defense, military research, etc.

Congress - Basic Work

  • Lawmaking - most pieces of legislation are in the form of bills.

    • Bills = drafts of law

  • Casework - the work done by a lawmaker to help constituents with a problem.

    • Some receive as many as 10,000 requests for info/services a year

  • Helping the District or State - members of Congress also try to bring federal government projects to their district/state

    • Public Works - every year Congress appropriates billions for a variety of projects (post office, military bases, dams, etc.) These bring jobs/money into a state/district

    • Grants and Contracts - government projects and grants that primarily benefit the home district are known as pork-barrel projects

2 Categories (all passed through Congress the same way)

  • Bills - proposed legislation under consideration by the legislature

    • Private - concern individual people or organizations (and their crimes against the government, etc.) ie.

    • Public - veterans benefits, taxation problems, etc. Concern the entire nation and involve general matters (Ex: taxation)

  • Joint Resolutions - no difference between a bill and a joint resolution.

    • Usually used to fix emergency problems.

    • Often used for ONE issue.

    • Ex: Tonkin Gulf Resolution

Role of Legislators

  1. Delegate - vote based on how they think the people in their home state or district would want them to vote.

  2. Trustee - believes that each question they face must be decided on its own merits. They vote based on their own judgment and ideology.

  3. Politico - is a combination of a delegate and a trustee.

From Bill to Law

Steps:

  • 1. Introduction - Every bill starts as an idea, which can come form private citizens, the White House, or special-interest groups.

    • A senator or rep. MUST introduce a bill before Congress will consider it.

    • Each bill is given a title and a number when it’s submitted

    • Congress = Proposal power

  • 2. Committee Action - after a bill is introduced it’s sent to the standing committee that is related to the subject of the bill. The committee can…

    • Pass the bill

    • Mark up/make changes

    • Ignore the bill and let it die (pigeonholing)

    • Kill the bill by majority vote

  • 3. Debating a Bill - bills approved in committee are ready for consideration by the full House or Senate

    • Rules of Debate - House - the Rules Committee sets the terms for debate like putting time limits on discussions, etc.

    • Rules of Debate - Senate - has fewer rules. Senators don’t have time limits.

      • Why filibuster? Senate needs unanimous consent before voting. Can end a filihjbuster with a 3/5 vote for cloture.

  • 4. Voting on a Bill - 3 ways; bills require majority vote (51%) to pass

    • House - voice vote (not tallied), standing vote, recorded vote (vote electronically)

    • Senate - voice vote (not tallied), standing vote, roll call vote (tallied)

    • Bills must pass both House and Senate before going to President.

Action by the President

  • After a bill is approved by both the House and Senate, it goes to the president. The president has 3 options:

    • Sign the bill and declare it a new law

    • Veto (reject bill). Congress can override it with a 2/3 vote.

      • Choose no action - if Congress is in session, after 10 days of no answer, bill becomes law

      • Pocket veto - if Congress adjourns within 10 days after giving the president the bill, the president can choose not to sign it and the bill will NOT become law.

Congress can override a presidential veto with a 2/3 majority vote.

Congress and the Budget

Preparing the Budget

  • Each year, the president and Congress work together to create a budget - a blueprint of how the government will raise and spend money.

  • Federal government fiscal year - October 1 to September 30

Budget Process

  • In February, the president proposes a budget to Congress. Congress then passes a budget resolution which totals revenues and spendings and sets targets for spending in various categories.

  • 2 Types of Spending:

    • Mandatory spending - does not need approval; it is required by law. Ex: social security

    • Discretionary spending - needs approval. Ex: highway construction

  • Next, Congress must pass appropriations bills - which approve spending for a particular activity. Must be approved by House, Senate, and the president.

Revenues and Expenditures

2 Parts to Budget:

  • 1. Revenues - half of federal revenue comes from income taxes (individual/corporate).

    • Second largest source of income is payroll taxes like social security and medicare.

    • Other sources include excise taxes (on goods), estate taxes (upon death), and entry feeds to nationally run places.

      • 3 Types of Taxes:

        • Progressive Tax - tax rates increase as income increases; our U.S. income taxes are set up this way.

        • Regressive Tax - where the tax rate falls for those who are in higher income brackets (as a percentage of their overall income). Ex: sales tax, social security tax, because poorer people spend more “in proportion” to their income.

        • Proportional Tax - tax takes the same percentage of income from everyone, regardless of how much they earn. Ex: NC income tax - 4.75%

  • 2. Expenditures - largest government expenditure is social security.

    • Also national defense

    • The government spends $300 billion on interest payments on our national debt

Why is the president so involved in the budget?

  • Because of the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921. It makes the president responsible for directing the preparation of the budget and making the major decisions about national budget priorities.